sb_enail.com wrote:
I've heard people say this quite a lot, and now that a "leading historian" is labeling him as such in the latest issue of Rolling Stones magazine, I feel that this is hyperbole (extravegant exaggeration to those not in the know). There have been worse presidents, and in light of 9/11 and the measures taken immediately thereafter to ensure the safety of our country, I personally feel that the Dubya is far from the bottom. Let's take a look at some of the worst presidents, and also at some who, while their presidencies may have been successful, were marred by some controversial decisions and scandals.
Andrew Johnson
The first president to be impeached, and with good reason. He vetoed just about every civil rights and reconstruction bill passed his way. He was an alcaholic, and prone to making derogatory remarks about the congressmen that opposed him. His actions set back reconstruction by years, and the effects of his racist views are still being felt today.
James Buchanaan
He failed to take action to prevent the Civil War. He sat idly by while the southern states seceeded, and his failure to take action was voted by a group of historians at the University of Louisville as the worst presidential mistake ever made (I know some of you are scoffing, thinking about Iraq, but the consequences of the invasion are still unfolding).
Warren G. Harding
Another of the "mediocre (or worse) presidents", his administration was plagued by corruption. There was the Teapot Dome scandal in which the Interior Secretary leased oil fields to businesses in exchange for private loans. Charles Forbes, head of the Veterans Bureau, skimmed profits, earned kick-backs and sold drugs and alcohol. "My God, this is a hell of a job," Harding once said. "I have no trouble with my enemies, but my damn friends, my God-damned friends. . . they're the ones that keep me walking the floor nights!"
Not So Bad, But Not So Good
William Jefferson Clinton
Two words: Monica Lewinsky. While he was in most other regards a good president, the affair has been argued by some historians as the worst mistake any president has ever made. Clinton's affair with the White House intern left a permanent stain on the presidency (and the carpet).
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
While he has been hailed as one of history's greatest presidents, and while I agree with that sentiment, the firebombing of Dresden and the dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki resulted in massive (and in the case of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, potentially unecessary) civilian casualties. At least 20,000 people (mostly refugees from other German cities) died in Dresden. Between 100,000 and 200,000 died in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, most of them civilians. While the bombings were hailed as premature enders of the war, Japan would have likely surrendered anyways, had they known that the Soviet Union had declared war on them. We had nothing to lose by waiting. The Japanese military was in tatters, and they were hardly on the offensive. Had we waited, Japan would likely have capitulated, and Hiroshima and Nagasaki could have been spared.
I think we need to put the current presidency in perspective. After all, our country still exists, there isn't rampant unemployment, and the economy is on the upswing. Afghanistan, once under the Taliban regime, now has a democratic government. Saddam Hussein was a loose cannon in the Middle-east. After all, he invaded Kuwait, launched SCUDs at Israel, gassed is own people (he holds the Guiness world record for this, seriously), and impeded UN weapons inspectors on numerous occasions (think about it: why would he be hiding something if he had nothing to hide?).
In short, before making hyperbolic statements about the Dubya, take a look at some of the presidents of the past, and some of the decisions they made.
P.S. Bush didn't lie about Iraq. Our intelligence was wrong. After 9/11, I don't blame Bush one bit for not wanting to take a chance that Iraq might have nukes and the will and desire to put them in the hands of terrorists.
You forgot Nixon. Not only was he involved in the Watergate scandal, he denied it, and also have you ever heard of the
Kent State Shootings? It wasn't directly Nixon's fault, but the national guard should never have benn odered in. Also Ragan was pretty bad.